Oh give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; his steadfast love endures forever!
Let the Njeuma/Effange families say,
"His steadfast love endures forever."
Uncle, you were my dearest uncle, my dad and most importantly my friend. Someone, whom it felt safe to come and open up to when necessary. You were our ALL in ALL, like your sister Rose Hegngi my mother will always say. I still cannot grasp the thought that you are no more. I can't stop shedding tears every time your name is mentioned or I see your picture, and every time I shed tears for you I feel sad. Hopefully I will come to accept the fact that you are truely no more and the sadness will go away.
Uncle, I have also been looking back and having some good laughs thinking of the times we shared together and I can only hope you are laughing on the other side. I go back twenty years ago before I travelled to America.. Oh how times flies. I was in Yaounde a few weeks before getting my visa and remembered all the advice I got from you, what wisdom to pass on to young ones. A few years later during one of your visits to the States, you had some stuff to do around the D.C metropolitan area to complete one of your books and you stayed with me in Virginia. Oh what a good time we had. You took care of yourself and all I had to do was make sure there was food in the house. I treated you like my date to every occasion we went to, I checked your outfit; chose what you wore to correlate with mine, made sure your hair was well kempt. Remember the time we had going to Karl Mondoa's wedding? How I remember it like it was just yesterday.
One of my memories with you that I will hold so dear is back in July/August of 2005. You visited my family in Anchorage, Alaska. I was seven months pregnant with my son Stephan and you treated me like a queen. You held my door and helped me out of the car every where we went even though I was the driver. You gave my daughter Kendra the love of a grandfather she needed. Letting her know she had a grandfather was a blessing. Oh you should have seen the look on her face when I told her grandpa Zac is dead. You had man time with Dan. You let me shave your hair that you had not shaved for years. How you thought you looked twenty years younger and you could not wait to see if lawyer Elad would recognize you upon your return to Cameroon. We talked about your diabetes and how you should remember it is a maintanace illness. The better you take care of yourself, the longer you will live a good long life. I assured you it was not going to be easy because you had to make lots of life style changes. We worked on different ways to check your blood sugar; above all I told you I knew you could do it.
Uncle, as the Lord does things you visited again in 2007 and attended my sister-in-law's funeral in Maryland and was privileged to see my son, Stephan whom I was pregnant with during your visit in 2005. Thank God for you. There are so many good times and bad times that life has brought forth our way but the memories we shared will live for ever.
Uncle, I heard of your last days of sickness and spoke with Embelle upon her return during your hospitalization and was told you were doing better but you had to keep taking your medications. Uncle, I do not want to dwell on those last days but keep the precious good memories alive. Oh my dearest Uncle Zac, I can go on and on, even to the point of writing a book on our times together, which I know you would love to read, but no I will leave you to rest. I know this is your time to rest and the good Lord will want that for you. Uncle you were a true patriarch of this family.
God has a purpose for everyone of us in this life and you have completed yours. It was a job well done.
Uncle, rest and remain pain free. May your soul find peace in the sight of the Lord who gave you to us until we meet again to part no more!
We love you and will miss you.
Your Niece-- Stella Hegngi Essim.